Jiaojin East Road
Jiaojindong Road, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ǎ OJ ī nd ō NGL ù, which means resigning from office, retiring and returning to the East. Later used as the allusion of seclusion. It comes from the biography of Yanghu in the book of Jin.
Idioms and allusions
[source] biography of Yanghu in the book of Jin: "tasting and following my brother Xiu's book, I said:" if you decide on the border affairs, you should go back to your hometown and be the ruins of the coffin. "
[example] when waiting for ~, the donkey will go to Beifu and go fishing with the public. Song · Liu Kezhuang's poem "Shui Long Yin · Xin Hai An Wan Sheng Chao"
Discrimination of words
words whose meaning is similar
living as a recluse in one 's hometown
Idiom information
Degree of common use: rare
Emotional color: commendatory words
Grammatical usage: used as predicate and object
Idiom structure: contraction
Time of birth: ancient times
Chinese PinYin : jiǎo jīn dōng lù
Jiaojin East Road
The car and the horse are on the verge of each other. chē mǎ fú còu
be hard to refuse for the sake of friendship. qíng miàn nán què